In the summer of 1944, across the battlefields of Normandy, US tanks
were confronted with a dangerous challenge: the mobile and deadly
_Panzerfaust _and _Panzerschreck _anti-tank weapons wielded by the
German infantry.
Having only occasionally encountered such weaponry before, the US
tankers were ill-equipped to defend against this kind of attack, and
the threat only increased as the summer wore on. Steven J Zaloga
charts the technological battle for dominance that ensued, as the US
Army devised new ways to defend against the threat posed by the German
shaped-charge projectiles. From the addition of sandbags and spare
tracks to individual tanks made by anxious crews on the ground to the
large-scale programmes put together by the US armies, the book
explores the implementation and effectiveness of the various tactics
employed by the tank crews, as well as the technology behind the
anti-tank weapons wielded by their German adversaries.
Drawing on first-hand accounts from the men on the ground, this
illustrated title examines the evolving trial of strength between US
armour and innovative German anti-tank weaponry in the climactic
months of World War II in Europe.
Les mer
European Theater 1944–45
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472832320
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter